The House Of Stuart

Queen Anne

1664-1714

On 4th May, 1702, England declared war against France. Churchill, leading the Queen's troops, experienced early successes in the war and was rewarded by being created Duke of Marlborough. He went on to gain a historic victory over the French at Blenheim in Bavaria.
Anne held a thanksgiving service at St. Paul's and granting him the royal estate at Woodstock and ordered Blenheim
Palace built on the site at the expense of the nation. A Further victory
followed at Ramillies in Flanders.

Louis XIV consequently gave aid to Anne's Catholic half-brother, and claimant to her throne, James Francis Edward. A French fleet was assembled at Dunkirk
in 1708. Whilst meeting with her Council to discuss the matter, the question
of whether James should be executed if taken prisoner was raised, Anne became
so moved and emotionally upset that she could not carry on with the meeting.
James unfortunately came down with measles just
as his fleet was about to set sail, the threat was removed and the French fleet chased north.

SARAH CHURCHILL

Sarah Churchill, always a quarrelsome woman, was growing increasingly jealous
and at times vehement at Anne's growing attachment to her cousin, Lady Masham. Marlborough, a gifted general,
won a further victory against the French at Oudenarde and entered France, capturing Lille, he went on to gain a further resounding
victory over Louis XIV at Malplaquet.

Sarah's now stormy relationship with
Anne, however, was growing successively more strained. On the way to the Thanksgiving Service at St. Paul's
to celebrate the victory of Oudenarde, Sarah provoked an embarrassing public
scene, which culminated in her audaciously telling the Queen to
"be quiet" on the steps of the Cathedral. Anne could not forgive
this public humiliation and it widened the breech between them into
a gaping chasm.

Although the crowns of England and Scotland had been united in the person of James I, they had continued to retain their own separate Parliaments. In 1707, both the English and Scottish Parliaments passed the twin Acts of Union, creating the joint kingdom of Great Britain. The act was not popular in Scotland.

George of Denmark fell seriously ill in October, 1708. Sarah visited Anne
and was with her when her husband died to offer her support. Queen Anne was devastated.
Sarah, true to character, untactfully continued to raise old quarrels with
the grieving Queen and would not let the matter rest. Anne's patience with the fractious
Sarah was wearing very thin.

Sarah wrote requesting an audience, the Queen,
trying to avoid the dreaded ordeal of another meeting with her, wrote that she would be unable
to see her until after Easter. Undeterred, Sarah arrived before Easter and
characteristically proceeded to bring up a matter of contention, Anne had
had enough, the two were never to meet again. At the end of the war the great Marlborough was dismissed from office. It was a poor reward for the services he had rendered his country and the Queen.

THE FINAL YEARS

As Anne entered the final years of her reign and her health declined, the issue of who should succeed
her on the thrones of England and Scotland became of mounting importance. Anne personally disliked
the Hanoverians, whom the succession had been settled on by Act of Parliament. Sophia of Hanover's son, George, had at one point
been sent to England as a prospective suitor for Anne's hand, but after
meeting her failed to propose, Anne could not forget this stinging insult to her
feminine pride.

It was suspected that Anne naturally preferred the claims
of her half-brother, James, known as the Pretender. The Queen herself fueled
such rumours by refusing to allow any of Sophia of Hanover's family to reside
in England. In 1712 Anne received a letter from the brother she had never
met, asking her to 'prefer your own brother, the last of our line,' he received
no reply but she refused to countenance the suggestion of Parliament's putting
a price on his head.

When Sophia of Hanover wrote to request that her grandson
might take up his position in the House of Lords, Anne's response was furious.
Her letter to Sophia was cold and dismissive. Sophia, whose greatest wish
was said to have had 'Sophia, Queen of Great Britain' inscribed on her tomb,
narrowly missed her ambition when she died suddenly at Hanover just a few months
before Queen Anne on 8th June 1714. On 27th July Anne finally decided in
favour of the Hanoverian succession.

At half past seven in the morning of 1st August, 1714, England's last Stuart monarch, now vastly obese and
ailing, died
at Kensington Palace. Arbuthnot wrote "sleep was never more welcome
to a weary traveller than death was to her." The Queen's body was so
swollen with dropsy at her death that she had to be interred in a vast, square shaped
coffin. She was buried beside her husband George of Denmark at Westminster
Abbey and was succeeded by George I, the first of the House of Hanover.